Posted in 1970s, Curiosities, Music, Reelin' In The Years, The Monkees at 19:44 on 8 June 2012
A wonderfully laconic offering from Michael Nesmith – post Monkees.
Michael Nesmith: Rio
One of those oddities that crop up from time to time concerns Nesmith. His mother invented Liquid Paper – correction fluid of this type is known as Tippex in the UK – see also Mike’s Wiki entry. He inherited her fortune.
No Comments »
Posted in Curiosities, Physics at 19:37 on 1 May 2012
No Comments »
Posted in Curiosities, Fife, War Memorials at 13:00 on 3 March 2012
There are three towns/villages in Fife with Wemyss in their names.
I featured West Wemyss on 29/2/12. It lies down on the coast off the coast road which leads east.
Climbing back up the hill out of West Wemyss and turning eastwards at the road junction you immediately enter Coaltown of Wemyss.
Passing through the village soon takes you into East Wemyss.
Famous accordionist and band leader Jimmy Shand was born here. There is a memorial to him near the foreshore.

Jimmy is more associated with another Fife village, Auchtermuchty, where his family moved soon after his birth. His signature tune was The Bluebell Polka, a hit in 1955. The video below was filmed in 1994. He was knighted in 1999.
Jimmy Shand: The Bluebell Polka
East Wemyss is known for a series of caves some of which have carvings which date back to Pictish times. The TV series Time Team investigated the caves in 2005.
The East Wemyss War Memorial is nicely set on a corner. The WW2 names are on the lower plaque. There is also one name for a post-World War conflict.

We somehow missed the Coaltown of Wemyss war memorial on the day the above photos were taken despite driving through it twice in broad daylight. Curiously on the next Tuesday as I was returning home from the East Fife game in the dark I did see it; on the gable-end of a building on the main street. So, next time.
No Comments »
Posted in Curiosities, Dumbarton FC, Football, History at 13:00 on 7 February 2012
Take a look at these historical league tables (top four only) which show when Cowdenbeath FC has won the Scottish Second Division.
Scottish League Division Two 1913-14
1 Cowdenbeath P 22 pts 31
2 Albion Rovers P 22 pts 27
3 Dundee Hibernian P 22 pts 26
4 Dunfermline Ath P 22 pts 26
In those days promotion wasn’t automatic so Cowdenbeath were in Division Two the next year. Cowdenbeath were one of three teams on equal points at the top.
Scottish League Division Two 1914-15
1 Leith Athletic P 26 pts 37
2 St Bernards P 26 pts 37
3 Cowdenbeath P 26 pts 37
4 East Stirlingshire P 26 pts 31
A three-way play-off decided the league winners. Cowdenbeath defeated Leith Athletic at East End Park and St. Bernards at Easter Road to take the title.
Scottish League Division Two 1938-39
1 Cowdenbeath P 34 pts 60
2 Alloa Athletic P 34 pts 48
3 East Fife P 34 pts 48
4 Airdrieonians P 34 pts 47
Cowdenbeath’s only other Championship was in Div 3 in 2006. Their other promotions came as runners-up, through play-offs or as a result of another club’s financial problems leading to a readjustment in the leagues.
So does anyone spot something here?
Well, I notice that every time Cowdenbeath have been Champions of a Division 2 in Scotland the UK has been involved in a major (world) war the next September.
Now take a gander at the present position in the SFL Div 2 (as of 7/2/12) :-
1 Cowdenbeath P 20 pts 41
2 Arbroath P 20 pts 39
3 Stenhousemuir P 20 pts 31
4 Dumbarton P 19 pts 28
Gulp!
Come on Arbroath!!! (And the Sons, obviously.)
No Comments »
Posted in Curiosities at 20:19 on 31 December 2011
Well. I’ve got some shortbread in (thanks to son no. 1) and I bought a cherry cake. Also on the table will be some cider for the good lady, beer and Irn Bru – my favourite advert for which remains this one:-
Hogmanay’s all sorted then.
No Comments »
Posted in Architecture, Curiosities, Trips at 13:00 on 24 November 2011
Coggeshall is a village on the road between Braintree and Colchester. We used to pass through it a lot on the bus to Colchester (and back) when we went of a Saturday to the big metropolis from the wilds of Braintree. At least it was on the main A 120 road then; like Braintree it too has been bypassed now.
Coggeshall had a reputation in Braintree as being inhabited by yokels – they told tales of “Coggies” in the same way others would of the Irish (or the Irish do of Kerrymen.) It’s barely three miles away!
We went on there after Silver End to see how much it had changed. Answer: not a lot. Mind you the minor road from Silver End to Coggeshall Hamlet (just south of Coggeshall proper) is the windiest thing I’ve ever driven on – like a sideways roller coaster. The road is called Cut Hedge Lane and skirts the edges of a farmer’s fields and there are no fences – nor hedges come to that – the fields start where the road’s edge is.
Coggeshall is still quaint, with Tudor style wooden framed houses of which this was the example most lopsided in appearance.

It’s not without some modern references, though. Someone had obviously been watching The Two Ronnies.

No Comments »
Posted in Architecture, Bridges, Curiosities, Trips at 18:14 on 30 October 2011
Cambridge is a curious mixture of mediævality and the modern. Plus you take your life in your hands walking about the place. People on bikes whizz around almost silently. We nearly got knocked down several times. So many bikes are there parked in one spot I heard one woman say to her companion, “Well my bike’s in there somewhere but I can’t tell where.”
It was morning when I took this, and raining slightly – not many takers for the punts.

King’s College (entrance below left) is impressive, but you can’t get back far enough to photograph it all. See below right for the chapel.
Access to the river is also restricted by the various colleges’ grounds.
On a lane down to the river we saw this unusual vertical sundial – well, actually four vertical sundials, one on each compass point of the tower I suppose.

This is from the footbridge over the Cam that we were able to cross. More empty punts – though if you look hard enough you’ll see one being poled just beyond the right arch of the bridge.

No Comments »
Posted in Architecture, Curiosities, History, Trips at 19:48 on 18 October 2011
Lincoln’s most striking architectural feature is of course its cathedral.

The cathedral can be widely seen from miles off. When we got to the city it was obvious why. It’s at the top of a very steep hill up from the main street. Once through the gateway it’s too close to get the full facade in one shot. This is a stitch of two photos.

Also on the hill’s summit is Lincoln Castle. The picture below was taken by turning 180 degrees from the first shot of the cathedral.

On the way up the hill we stopped into an antique shop. From its window I noticed the building across the street. More particularly its name.
Click on the photo if you can’t
see the name clearly.

It’s now host to a second-hand book shop. You can just about see the steps up to the main floor level through the doorway. On the fronts of two treads it says BOOKS, NEW & SECONDHAND.
The next house down has a similar startling title (to modern eyes.)
This is no doubt a true reflection of mediæval Lincoln. In those times, Jews were not present in England to a great extent and were restricted by law to a very few occupations – specifically money lending (which was forbidden to non-Jews.) They would also have been required to live close together to avoid mixing too much with their Christian neighbours.
Thank goodness we’re more enlightened, open and friendly nowadays to people who may be different from us. Or even just foreign. (Oh! Hang on.)
No Comments »
Posted in Curiosities, Events dear boy. Events at 23:09 on 25 September 2011
I’ve just put all my missing posts back up via the medium of googlereader.
My blog administrator could see them all and showed me how to access them. Much cutting and pasting followed.
Unfortunately the back up he attempted did not succeed (there was some error message) and as a result the comments have gone. I think all the comments – for up to five months!! – have disappeared. Only ones since the restore are there.
This all seems to have played havoc with the formatting of the second page of entries.
No Comments »
Posted in Curiosities at 18:54 on 23 September 2011
Italian scientists have reported a finding that implies that neutrinos can travel faster than light. So much for Einstein, then. (And perhaps Lieutenant Montgomery Scott of Star Trek fame – to be born in Linlithgow in 2222.)
I can’t deny it’s quite exciting and may mean we have to throw over everything we thought we knew about the the way the universe works.
And perhaps all those space operas where starships cleave the paper light years with ease might be reasonable after all.
Well, maybe.
The result is only that the neutrinos seem to arrive 60 billionths of a second earlier than they should have, with a plus or minus margin of 10 billionths of a second. It awaits checking.
Caution may be in order. Remember cold fusion?
In any case light is already known to travel at slightly different speeds depending on the medium it is moving through. It is slower in glass and air than in a vacuum, so maybe this is a similar effect.
Anyway, the reported difference between neutrinos and light isn’t much – 299,798,454 metres per second compared to the 299,792,458 metres per second of light in a vacuum and according to the first link above it’s already been postulated that neutrinos might be faster than light, if only by a fraction.
I think there’s sufficient accumulated evidence to suggest that Einstein’s famous E = mc2 equation is reliable that we won’t have to junk it just yet. Newton’s F = ma and F = Gm1m2/r2 are still going strong after 400 years.
No Comments »